2002 in Norwegian football

Football in Norway
Season2002
Men's football
TippeligaenRosenborg
1. divisjonTromsø
2. divisjonFredrikstad (Group 1)
Bærum (Group 2)
Mandalskameratene (Group 3)
Alta (Group 4)
CupenVålerenga
Women's football
ToppserienKolbotn
1. divisjonLiungen
CupenTrondheims-Ørn
2001 2003

Results from Norwegian football in 2002.

Men's football

Tippeligaen

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Rosenborg (C) 26 17 5 4 57 30 +27 56 Qualification for the Champions League second qualifying round
2 Molde 26 15 5 6 48 26 +22 50 Qualification for the UEFA Cup qualifying round
3 Lyn 26 14 5 7 36 29 +7 47
4 Viking 26 11 11 4 44 31 +13 44
5 Stabæk 26 12 6 8 48 34 +14 42
6 Odd Grenland 26 12 5 9 36 30 +6 41
7 Lillestrøm 26 10 6 10 37 30 +7 36
8 Vålerenga 26 7 12 7 38 31 +7 33 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first round[lower-alpha 1]
9 Bryne 26 8 7 11 38 39 1 31
10 Bodø/Glimt 26 9 4 13 38 41 3 31
11 Sogndal 26 8 6 12 37 51 14 30
12 Brann (O) 26 8 3 15 35 52 17 27 Qualification for the relegation play-offs
13 Moss (R) 26 6 6 14 32 49 17 24 Relegation to 1. divisjon
14 Start (R) 26 2 5 19 21 72 51 11
Source: fotball.no
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion; (O) Play-off winner; (R) Relegated.
Notes:
  1. Vålerenga qualified for the UEFA Cup first round as Norwegian Cup winners.
Play-offs

November 2: Sandefjord – Brann 0–0

November 6: Brann – Sandefjord 2–1 (agg. 2–1)

Brann stay up.

1. divisjon

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1 Tromsø (C, P) 30 21 4 5 78 36 +42 67 Promotion to Tippeligaen
2 Aalesund (P) 30 19 7 4 77 26 +51 64
3 Sandefjord 30 18 6 6 65 38 +27 60 Qualification for the promotion play-offs
4 Hønefoss 30 18 4 8 64 36 +28 58
5 Strømsgodset 30 17 4 9 72 51 +21 55
6 Raufoss 30 17 3 10 71 50 +21 54
7 Hødd 30 16 4 10 50 41 +9 52
8 HamKam 30 11 8 11 60 47 +13 41
9 Haugesund 30 11 7 12 46 59 13 40
10 Oslo Øst 30 11 5 14 59 71 12 38
11 Ørn-Horten 30 7 8 15 38 69 31 29
12 Skeid 30 7 7 16 31 48 17 28
13 Åsane (R) 30 8 4 18 41 59 18 28 Relegation to 2. divisjon
14 Tromsdalen (R) 30 8 3 19 40 65 25 27
15 Lørenskog (R) 30 5 5 20 31 72 41 20
16 Tollnes (R) 30 6 1 23 37 92 55 19
Source: nifs.no
(C) Champion; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated.

2. divisjon

3. divisjon

Norwegian Cup

Final

Odd Grenland0–1Vålerenga
Report Levernes  5'
Attendance: 25,481

Women's football

Toppserien

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Kolbotn (C) 18 15 2 1 60 9 +51 47 Qualification for the UEFA Women's Cup second qualifying round
2 Asker 18 14 2 2 81 23 +58 44
3 Trondheims-Ørn 18 12 3 3 63 21 +42 39
4 Røa 18 9 4 5 47 32 +15 31
5 Arna-Bjørnar 18 8 2 8 44 38 +6 26
6 Team Strømmen 18 6 2 10 29 59 30 20
7 Klepp 18 5 2 11 26 45 19 17
8 Larvik 18 4 5 9 26 55 29 17
9 Sandviken (R) 18 3 4 11 20 48 28 13 Relegation to 1. divisjon
10 Byåsen (R) 18 0 2 16 13 79 66 2
Source: NIFS
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.

1. divisjon

1. Liungen 16 14 1 1 71–14 43 Promoted
2. Fløya 16 9 2 5 27–17 29 Promoted
-------------------------------------
3. Skeid 16 8 5 3 31–22 29
4. Haugar 16 8 0 8 31–31 24
5. Medkila 16 6 3 7 34–24 21
6. Fortuna 16 6 2 8 21–28 20
7. Nittedal 16 6 2 8 22–38 20 (ex Gjelleråsen)
8. Vålerenga 16 5 3 8 22–32 18
-------------------------------------
9. Follese 16 1 0 15 11–64 3 Relegated
Athene Moss withdrew before the season because of financial problems.

Final

Men's UEFA competitions

Norwegian representatives:

Champions League

Qualifying rounds

Second qualifying round
Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Lillestrøm SK 0–2 Željezničar 0–1 0–1
Third qualifying round
Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Rosenborg 4–2 Brøndby 1–0 3–2

Champions League, Phase 1

Group D
Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Internazionale 6 3 2 1 12 8 +4 11 Advance to second group stage
2 Ajax 6 2 2 2 6 5 +1 8
3 Lyon 6 2 2 2 12 9 +3 8 Transfer to UEFA Cup
4 Rosenborg 6 0 4 2 4 12 8 4
Source: RSSSF

Matches

  • September 17: Rosenborg – Inter (Italy) 2–2
  • September 25: Lyon (France) – Rosenborg 5–0
  • October 2: Rosenborg – Ajax (Netherlands) 0–0
  • October 22: Ajax – Rosenborg 1–1
  • October 30: Inter – Rosenborg 3–0
  • November 12: Rosenborg – Lyon 1–1

UEFA Cup

Preliminary Round

August 15: Brann – Suduva Marijampole (Lithuania) 2–3

Stabæk – Linfield (Northern Ireland) 4–0

August 29: Linfield – Stabæk 1–1 (agg. 1–5)

Suduva Marijampole – Brann 3–2 (agg. 6–4)

First round

September 19: Anderlecht (Belgium) – Stabæk 0–1

Chelsea (England) – Viking 2–1

October 3: Stabæk – Anderlecht 1–2 (agg. 2–2, Anderlecht on away goals)

Viking – Chelsea 4–2 (agg. 5–4)

Second round

October 31: Celta (Spain) – Viking 3–0

November 14: Viking – Celta 1–1 (agg. 1–4)

Intertoto Cup

No Norwegian representative this season.

UEFA Women's Cup

Group 5

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1 Trondheims-Ørn 3 3 0 0 18 0 +18 9
2 Saestum 3 2 0 1 10 3 +7 6
3 Regal Bucharest 3 1 0 2 3 6 3 3
4 PAOK 3 0 0 3 1 23 22 0
Source:

Matches (in Saloniki)

September 25: Trondheims/Ørn – Saestum (Netherlands) 2–0
September 27: Trondheims/Ørn – PAOK Saloniki (Greece) 12–0
September 29: Regal București (Romania) – Trondheims/Ørn 0–4

Quarter-finals

Team 1 Agg. Team 2 1st leg 2nd leg
Trondheims-Ørn 2–3 Fortuna Hjørring 2–2 0–1

National teams

Norway men's national football team

Date Venue Opponent Res.* Comp. Norwegian goalscorers
February 13 Brussel  Belgium 1–0 F
March 27 Tunis  Tunisia 0–0 F
April 17 Oslo  Sweden 0–0 F
May 14 Oslo  Japan 3–0 F Henning Berg, Sigurd Rushfeldt, Ole Gunnar Solskjær
May 22 Bodø  Iceland 1–1 F Ole Gunnar Solskjær
August 21 Oslo  Netherlands 0–1 F
September 7 Oslo  Denmark 2–2 ECQ John Arne Riise, John Carew
October 12 Bucharest  Romania 1–0 ECQ Steffen Iversen
October 16 Oslo  Bosnia and Herzegovina 2–0 ECQ Claus Lundekvam, John Arne Riise
November 20 Wien  Austria 1–0 F Pa-Madou Kah

Note: Norway's goals first
Explanation:

Norway women's national football team

January 23: Norway – United States 1–0, friendly


January 25: China – Norway 0–3, friendly


January 27: Norway – Germany 1–3, friendly


March 1: Norway – England 3–1, friendly


March 3: Norway – Sweden 3–3, friendly


March 5: Norway – United States 3–2, friendly


March 7: Norway – China 0–1, friendly


March 24: Czech Republic – Norway 1–5, World Cup qualifier


May 9: Norway – France 3–1, World Cup qualifier


May 12: Ukraine – Norway 1–1, World Cup qualifier


July 17: Canada – Norway 2–2, friendly


July 21: United States – Norway 4–0, friendly


September 14: Norway – Germany 1–3, friendly

References

  1. "Norway – List of Women Cup Finals". RSSSF.no. Retrieved 17 September 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.